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Sterling silver necklace with an annular blue glass bead.
Handmade glass bead with a brown color and a yellow thread, looking like Merovingian beads.
Handmade glass bead in a brown color and a shape that is typical of the Medieval period. Combined with a stylish silver necklace.
Necklace with glass eyes bead. Beads like this were made from the Iron Age to the Middle Ages. These specimens are specifically based on Medieval finds from Birka, Sweden.
The bead on this necklace is a melon bead that was typical of the Roman period.
Roman melon beads were usually made in faience.
They have a typical turquoise color.
The beads we use are made in the same way the Romans did.
We combine them with a silver necklace.
You can wear this refined necklace for any occasion!
Sterling silver necklace with an annular yellow glass bead.
The glass bead is made according to early medieval tradition.
Yellow glass beads such as this one are often found in early medieval graves. Along with a lot of other beads in various colors they were part of necklaces that were buried with the deceased.
The ancient Greeks linked the olive tree to the god Zeus. The winner of the ancient Olympic Games was awarded an olive wreath. This jewel is made on the basis of a mold made from a real olive leaf.
Achilles is the heroic Greek warrior from Homer’s Iliad. It reminds the wearer to be brave and strong.
This pendant is a cast of a stone age flint arrowhead. The pendant is attached to a leather cord.
Earrings inspired by the Greco-Roman world. Based on coins of Alexander the Great (4th century BC) depicting the goddess Athena on the obverse and Nike on the reverse. Athena was the goddess of wisdom, but also of war and peace. Nike was the Greek goddess of victory.
Responsible publisher: Clayre & Eef info@clayre-eef.com +31475571722 De Giesel 46 NL 6080 Haelen
In the past people were not afraid of a game. Before the use of plastic, many dice were made in bone. These bone dice have a point circle decoration. This way of applying dots was already in use by the Greeks and the Romans. Numerous archaeological finds show us that the technique was also used in the Middle Ages and in more recent times.
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